Hamdaz Bayadt (32mm, 75mm)
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Hamdaz Bayadt, the nomadic centaur warrior, was a figure of awe and dread across the endless steppes. With a massive axe strapped across his back and a battered shield painted with the sigils of his wandering tribe, he roamed the wild plains, defending his people from raiders, predators, and the creeping edges of civilization. His four legs thundered across the earth like a storm, and his mane, streaked with gray, whipped in the wind as he charged into battle. The nomads revered him as both a protector and a conqueror, a centaur whose strength and cunning had kept their way of life alive for decades. Each scar on his human chest and equine flank told a story of battles fought and victories claimed beneath the endless skies.
One fateful day, Hamdaz and his tribe encountered an imperial caravan cutting through their sacred grazing lands, a provocation he could not ignore. With a rallying cry, he led his warriors into the fray, his axe gleaming in the sun as it cleaved through armor and steel alike. The imperials, unprepared for the ferocity of the centaur charge, scattered like leaves in the wind. Hamdaz's shield deflected arrows and spears, and his war cries echoed across the plains as he dismantled the enemy line. When the battle was over, the caravan lay in ruins, and Hamdaz stood at its center, victorious but somber. To him, the fight was never about glory—it was about ensuring the freedom of his people and the sanctity of the steppes. With the spoils of war divided, Hamdaz led his tribe onward, his shadow long against the golden grasses, a living legend in a land that refused to be tamed.